Thursday, April 4, 2013

Growing up, Easter morning was almost as big of a deal for the
kids in my family as Christmas morning. My parents created an elaborate
treasure hunt with clues throughout the house leading us to Easter baskets and
chocolate. Since moving to Berlin three years ago, 2013 was our first Easter in
the city as a family—we normally travel during this time—and Lennon was finally
old enough for a proper Easter hunt.

The morning started off early—5:30am early—with a note from the
Easter Bunny and a chocolate rabbit placed strategically near where we'd suspected
he'd awake—in our bed. Behind the note was a clue as to where Lennon could find
his next Easter surprise—from Mr. Bunny, of course. The clue came in the form
of a printed photo of a location Lennon frequents in our apartment, making it
simple for him to know where to look.

On
the edge of the bathtub, Lennon found a papier-mâché egg with Easter stickers
inside, along with another clue.

Atop
his play kitchen, was a new cooking and eating play set. Though another clue
was included here, he became a bit distracted at this juncture.

His
final clue brought him to his bedroom where he found a new bed for his baby
doll. We're hoping to make him into a little Papa before his sister arrives in June.
So far he’s playing along nicely.

Later
that day, we would be visiting several of Lennon's friends and I wanted to
bring something special for each of them. I made five small Easter baskets with a
few goodies inside. For the baskets, I purchased this pattern but modified the
handles and some of the construction to make it more Easter basket-like. I used
my handy printable fabric to make the name plaques on the front. The linen and
dotted fabric was purchased from IKEA—of all places—and the orange and white
rick-rack was a market stall find.

Each
child received two decorated sugar cookies inside their homemade basket. After much trial
and disappointment over the years with sugar cookies I tried this recipe entitled 'The Best Sugar Cookies.' They lived up to their name! An organic
chocolate bunny lolly made by Alnatura was also included.

The
tutorial for the carrots can be found here—it's free! Along with the dotted
fabric from IKEA and the market stall rick-rack, the green check fabric I used for the
carrot tops was also found at the market, on an enormously wide bolt. Just one meter
yielded so much that I've already made big plans for the leftovers.

The
padded baskets came in handy later for egg hunting with Lennon's buddy Otis.

In
the afternoon, we made our way to Kreuzberg for a family supper with more of
Lennon's little buddies and their parents. Lennon had been gifted a beautiful, mint condition vintage suit, circa 1950s, by my Mother, purchased from an Etsy
seller. I couldn't wait for him to don it as his Easter outfit. With the absence of an
authentic 1950s boys button down shirt, Lennon wore a white long sleeve onesie from
H&M underneath and I made him a coordinating neckerchief from leftover vintage yardage and mini rick-rack, which sweetened
the whole look.

For
supper with friends, I made an asparagus quiche and a carrot cake. Other folks
had made lasagna, salad, and homemade bread. Our hosts made lamb and a pear
tart—so much good food and really wonderful people.

I
pushed myself beyond my energy level this Easter making sure I created the type of day I
really wanted my family to experience, but it was absolutely worth it. I’ve
been taking extra naps ever since to make up for it. My stamina is just not the
same in the third trimester. Fortunately, I'm currently on maternity leave from my
PhD program, which I'll be writing more about in the months to come. Taking
this leave has lifted a tremendous weight off my shoulders and has allowed this
pregnant mother to do just what she desires at this exact moment: focus on
being a mom.

About Me

Amy is a native Californian who started her family with husband Nicholas in Berlin Germany. After giving birth to a son in 2011 and a daughter in 2013, Amy returned with her family to the SF Bay Area and began work in her dream job as an Arts Educator. In her pre-Mama life, she ran theatre companies, performed, designed costumes, and worked in arts administration. She writes about motherhood, making, DIY craftiness while sorting through the messy, imperfect, chocolate stained world of a woman approaching the good years.